Introduction

Welcome to the network Hexi server. The rules of Hexi3base are below. The
commands are the same for all pbmserv games.

Hexi is based on Octi. Octi (c) Donald Green, and a registered trademark of GATC.

Rules of Hexi (3 base version)

Set-up

At the start of the game, you have the following:
- a piece (called a "pod") on each of your home hexi spaces,
- 3 pods stored offboard,
- 19 prongs.

Object of the Game

To occupy all THREE of your opponent's home hexi spaces.

Movement

1. Add a prong to a pod
2. Move a prong on a pod to a new location
3. Add a pod: the pod can be placed on any home hexi space,
whether empty or occupied by a friendly piece. If you occupy at least one of
your opponent's hexi spaces, you may bring a captured pod back into play; this rescued pod
must be placed on top of a friendly piece on a hexi space
4. Move a pod: move a pod one space in the direction of a prong.
The pod can move either to an empty space, or to a space occupied by a
friendly piece(s).
5. Jump or capture: a pod may jump over an adjacent piece
(in the direction of a pod), so long as the space beyond is empty.
Multiple jumps are allowed, so long as each jump is in the direction
of a prong, and the jumping piece does not jump over the same space more than once.
At the end of the move, any or all of the pieces jumped may be captured.
Stacks: any or all of the pieces in a stack may move or jump in the same turn.
All moving pieces are deemed to be moving simultaneously, so they can't
jump over each other or get in each others' way.

The above is a section of the hexi display - sorry for the size,
but we're trying to fit a lot of information into a fairly small area.

On your left, you can see the board itself. Board coordinates are
specified by an XY coordinate; for example, the topmost space is 59.

A pod on its own is shown in the space, with lines showing the
directions in which it can move.

A stack of pods are shown with a letter (e.g. the letter A in space 67.
On the right, you'll see the stack letter followed by all the pods in
that stack, complete with their possible directions of movement.

Over on the right, you'll also see the following:

Black(x) Res Cap Prongs
1 1 11

This shows the status of the player (in this case, Black)...
Res: number of reserve pieces
Cap: number of pieces that have been captured
Prongs: number of prongs in reserve

Notation

Describing a pod

When a pod is on its own, the space on which a pod sits is
sufficient to describe the pod, x co-ordinate then y co-ordinate, e.g. 46.
Where there is some ambiguity as to which pod is referred to, e.g.
stacked pods, the complete description is: co-ordinates followed by
prongs, e.g. 46cdef. In the move descriptions below, I'll just write this as
[piece].

Notes:
1. when only one piece in a stack can make a specific move, then you
can just use the XY coordinates
2. when there are two identical pieces in a stack, there is no need
to distinguish between them